If you're looking for a phone that's a little simpler, one designed primarily to take and make calls without all the bells and whistles of Android or iOS, you have options. Last week ​we asked for your favorites, then looked at ​the five best feature phones. Now we're back to highlight the most popular.

Of the five great models we highlighted, you picked the Nokia 515 as the crowd favorite. Packing a sleek design, a 5MP camera, quad-band GSM, gorilla glass screen, facial detection, and more features than we have room to list, it's a great option for anyone who wants a phone that's genuinely useful but still largely a feature phone. It brought in over 61% of the overall vote.

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In second place with over 16% of the vote was the tried and true Motorola Razr2 v9, the stylish, good-looking clamshell that followed after the massive success of the original Motorola Razr. The rugged Casio G'zOne Ravine 2 came in third with 13% of the vote, thanks to its rugged, waterproof clamshell design and its history of solid, well-built feature phones. In fourth place with over 5% of the vote was the LG Rumor Reflex (and its variants), and bringing up the rear with close to 4% of the overall vote was the Samsung Jitterbug.

Most of us love our smartphones, but not everyone needs one. For some people, a phone that makes phone calls, maybe keeps track of our phone numbers, and is easy to text on is more than enough. Whether it's to save money on mobile data or to keep complexity down, this week we're looking at five of the best regular feature phones (also known as "dumbphones"), based on your nominations.

Earlier in the week, we asked you which feature phones you thought were the best—whether they were simple flip phones designed to do nothing more than make and take calls, or phones that sit somewhere between a simple phone and a smartphone. We got a lot of nominations in the call for contenders thread that were a bit too smartphone for our purposes, but we also got a number of great flip and feature phones that fit the bill, and are still widely available.

Whether they're made for that family member or friend who just doesn't care for the complexity and apps that come with iOS or Android, or whether it's for you, tired of paying for data plans you don't use, here are your five most popular feature phones, in no particular order:

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The polls are closed and the votes are counted! To see which of these five great phones took the top spot, head over to our Hive Five followup post to check out and discuss the winner!

The Samsung Jitterbug was developed as a throwback to the clamshell-style flip phones of the early 2000s—unlike some of the other entries in the lineup, it's not entirely an old phone that's managed to persist in popularity since they were introduced. Instead, the Jitterbug is a relatively new device (and that's not including the new Jitterbug Touch 2) designed for use by people who prefer simpler, uncomplicated phones, elderly people who may have difficulty seeing the small screen font on other devices (the Jitterbug boasts large on-screen text), and a battery that just won't quit. The Jitterbug is available in the US on GreatCall, an MVNO on Verizon Wireless' network.

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The Jitterbug is designed to do one thing: place and take calls. GreatCall rolls in some safety and emergency response features into its mobile plans, largely because it markets itself to elderly people, but don't expect much more than that—the phone isn't a texting wonder, and it won't walk the line between a simple phone and a smartphone. It doesn't have extended or enhanced features that will let you text or manage your calendar without a data plan, but it does have a decent camera that lets you upload the photos you take to the web—presuming you pay for the ability. Read more about it in its nomination thread, or in this PCMag review.

Jitterbug! - It doesn't have a bunch of confusing features I don't understand. The…

Full disclosure, even though I didn't nominate it, I happily owned a Motorola Razr2 V9, and loved it. It was the sleek, shiny successor to the original Razr—the phone that all but defined clamshells in the early to mid 2000s, and even though they're tricky to come across these days, if you had one, you probably know they still work like a charm—in fact, my old one is still kicking (it's my father's primary cellphone), as long as you replace the battery now and again when it stops holding a charge. It has enough features to keep you happy—including a built-in contact manager, a calendar with reminders, customizable messages and ringtones, a 2MP camera, stereo Bluetooth, and more. It also came in both CDMA and GSM variants, here in the US and abroad, making it a portable device you could take from carrier to carrier, or abroad if you're traveling.

If what you need is a feature phone that's rugged enough to stand up to a bit of punishment, or a phone you can trust to keep working when you take it out in the dirt, the mud, in the water, or in any other rough or harsh environments, the Casio G'zOne (yes, that's how it's spelled) Ravine may be the phone for you. The G'zOne line started years ago with the Boulder, a rugged black and silver clamshell that Casio boasted was up to military field specifications. The line has been updated since then with the Rock, the Brigade, and most recently, the Ravine and its current flagship feature phone, the Ravine 2. All of the G'zOne models have primarily been available on Verizon Wireless in the United States.

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Each sucessor the to the original Boulder keeps with its rugged design, military-spec casing and water resistance, and general features, just improving on the guts wherever possible. The Ravine 2 features a 3.2MP camera with an LED flashlight, a bright 240px x 320px TFT LCD screen on the inside, push-to-talk, support for mobile web via Opera Mini, USB 2.0, GPS, and more. Those of you who nominated it vouched for its solid build quality, pointing out that it's commonly seen on construction sites and in the hands of atheletes and researchers who work (and play) in harsh environments. Plus, it's probably the only phone in the lineup that will let you take a call in the shower without flinching. Read more about it in this CNET review, this PCMag review, or in its nomination thread.

The LG Rumor Reflex is a CDMA-based feature phone available on Sprint, Boost Mobile, and US Cellular in the United States, and is one of CNET's favorite feature phones. It has the looks of a smartphone thanks to its 240px x 400px TFT touchscreen, but it also sports a slide-out QWERTY keyboard that makes for easy texting. The screen is big enough to use in portrait or landscape modes, and the phone comes with enough built-in mini "apps" to keep most users satisfied even if they are looking for a somewhat smartphone-ish experience. It boasts incredible battery life, great call quality, and a super-responsive touch screen—all of which make it ideal for someone who, for example, wants a smartphone-like experience for texting or communicating with friends, but doesn't necessarily need to have their own data plan.

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The CDMA variant of the LG Rumor Reflex is the LG Freedom, available on US Cellular. It's probably the most smartphone-like in the roundup so far, but since it doesn't support mobile data at all, it fits firmly in the feature-phone category. You can read more about it in this PCMag review, or in its nominations thread here.

The Nokia 515 is actually a new device, a feature phone that runs Series 40 as an operating system, but doesn't support 3G or 4G, making it firmly a sharp-looking and highly functional feature phone. It sports a gorilla glass screen, a good looking keypad, support for quad-band GSM networks and dual SIM cards (which we'll get to in a second), and a 240px by 320px TFT display. It also packs a 5MP camera capable of video, facial detection, and panoramic shots. It doesn't have an app store or anything, but it comes packing mini apps for business and social networking, and you can use it over mobile data to keep up with Twitter or Facebook, keep an eye on your calendar, set reminders and appointments, and even surf the web if you're okay with WAP. It's currently available in select countries in Europe and it's making its way across Asia. It's not currently available in the United States, but there's no reason an unlocked version wouldn't work on any GSM carrier in the US if you brought it in.

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Those of you who nominated the Nokia 515 noted its exceptional build quality and suite of actually useful features—all of which have some of you tempted to ditch your smartphones and use this instead to stay productive without the fluff and cruft of a more complex mobile OS. You also praised its FM recording features, 38 day reported standby time, and other high-end features—which may account for its close to $150 price tag. To read more, check out PhoneDog's impressions, this Engadget preview, and of course, the nomination thread.

Now that you've seen the top five, it's time to put them to an all-out vote to determine the Lifehacker community favorite:

This week's honorable mentions go out totheNokia Ashaseries,a line of phones in different form factors and with different features, but all firmly in the in-between space between smartphones and feature phones. Many of them support mobile data if you want it, definitely support Wi-Fi, and some have full keyboards while others have large, bright touchscreens. All of them are generally available in different colors, pack apps on-board to help you take great pictures and share them, stay in touch with your friends via text or social media, and more. Nokia has noted that they want the Asha line to be a "ramp up" to the Windows Phone platform, so it shares a lot of design sensibilities.

The Hive Five is based on reader nominations. As with most Hive Five posts, if your favorite was left out, it didn't get the nominations required in the call for contenders post to make the top five. We understand it's
a bit of a popularity contest. Have a suggestion for the Hive Five? Send us an email at tips+hivefive@lifehacker.com!